Marduke
Flashaholic
Believe me I understand exactly what you are saying. I am just confused about the milliamp ratings. Isn't the M reading the amount of current being put out? If two cells have about the same ma (current)rating (according to the meter) then are they not "matched" CURRENT WISE.
I know you can have a rated 2000mah (discharged= 1900) and another rated 2000mah (discharged= 1500) and they are NOT matched. But for argument sake they both have a 1500 (charged)milliamp rating. If they are both putting out the same amount of current isn't that "good".
Consequently can it go the other way too.
i.e. 2 exactly charged mah readouts of 1900 and one has a milliamp rating of 1500 and the other 1350.
Note: I am not suggesting that the milliamp rating and the mah ratings are supposed to be the same...
Since I am a novice, I am just trying to understand what the meter is telling me.
Also trying to decide if I need a ZTS tester or just use a meter. (I know the ZTS put a load on it).
I think you still do not understand the difference between current and capacity.
To put it simply and plainly, you cannot match "current". There is no such thing as "current matching". Cells do not have a "mA" rating, which is current. They have a "mAh" rating, which is capacity. Trying to measure the "current" of a cell with a multimeter doesn't give you a measure of ANYTHING, it just does one of 3 things (or some multiple thereof):
1) blows the fuse of your multimeter
2) blows the multimeter itself if it is unfused
3) causes the cell to vent/explode because you are short circuiting it
The ZTS puts a cell under load, and measures voltage.
Since you have the Maha, why try to use the meter at all? You can test a cell's capacity, and match them accordingly for use in various devices. This only needs done infrequently to spot check cell health.